1,721,191 research outputs found

    SULFUR SOLUBILITY IN SILICATE MELTS: A THERMOCHEMICAL MODEL

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    A termochemical model for calculating sulfur solubility of simple and complex silicate melts has been developed in the framework of the Toop-Samis polymeric approach combined with a Flood - Grjotheim theoretical treatment of silicate slags [1,2]. The model allows one to compute sulfide and sulfate content of silicate melts whenever fugacity of gaseous sulphur is provided. "Electrically equivalent ion fractions" are needed to weigh the contribution of the various disproportion reactions of the type: MOmelt + 1/2S2,gas ,MSmelt + 1/2O2,gas (1) MOmelt + 1/2S2,gas + 3/2O2,gas ,MSO4,melt (2) Eqs. 1 and 2 account for the oxide-sulfide and the oxide-sulfate disproportionation in silicate melt. Electrically equivalent ion fractions are computed, in a fused salt Temkin notation, over the appropriate matrixes (anionic and cationic). The extension of such matrixes is calculated in the framework of a polymeric model previously developed [1,2,3] and based on a parameterization of acid-base properties of melts. No adjustable parameters are used and model activities follow the raoultian behavior implicit in the ion matrix solution of the Temkin notation. The model is based on a huge amount of data available in literature and displays a high heuristic capability with virtually no compositional limits, as long as the structural role assigned to each oxide holds. REFERENCES: [1] Ottonello G., Moretti R., Marini L. and Vetuschi Zuccolini M. (2001), Chem. Geol., 174, 157-179. [2] Moretti R. (2002) PhD Thesis, University of Pisa. [3] Ottonello G. (2001) J. Non-Cryst. Solids, 282, 72-85.

    An appraisal of endmember energy and mixing properties of rare earth garnets

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    Energetics of rare Earth aluminum (REE3Al5O12), iron (REE3Fe5O12) and gallium (REE3Ga5O12) garnets are assessed through a critical evaluation of all the existing experimental data and a thermodynamic treatment of vibrational, static and volumetric properties of the various substances. Application of the developed thermodynamic data-base, coupled with the interionic static potential model previsouly developed for major silicate garnet end members [1] leads to establish the mixing properties of the various substances with the major isostructural silicate components and to determine the limits of Henry’s law behavior for REE in natural garnets. Based on calculations, mixing of REE granet components at trace level (i.e., below about 102 ppm) with major silicate components is virtually ideal and deviations from ideality become sensible at trace concentrations exceeding 103 ppm. Corresponding deviations from Nernst’s law behavior in garnet/fluid REE equilibria follows exponential trends whose nature is analogous to what has been experimentally observed in silicate/fluid equilibria involving other solid phases and other trace elements. It is finally stressed that the light REE–heavy REE (LREE/HREE) fractionation observed in natural garnet specimens is due to the intrinsic energy properties of the various REE-garnet end members, and not to a structural effect dictated by the carrier, as commonly assumed in literature. References: [1] Ottonello G. et al. (1996) Amer. Mineral, 81, 429–447. [2

    A NEW METHOD TO COMPUTE FLUIDS SATURATION IN C-H-O-S-SILICATE MELT SYSTEMS

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    We developed a method to calculate equilibrium between a C-O-H-S fluid phase and a silicate melt based on a previous model for the saturation of H2O-CO2 fluids (Papale, 1999) and on a thermochemical approach for calculating sulfide and sulfate solubilities of simple and complex melts. In particular, this second approach combines the Toop-Samis polymeric model with the Flood - Grjotheim theoretical treatment of silicate melts (Ottonello et al., 2001; Moretti, 2002). Moreover, fugacities in the gaseous phase are computed through the SUPERFLUID code (Belonoshko et al., 1992). The C-H-O-S saturation model allows determining the partition of H2O, CO2, and S between silicate melt and coexisting fluid, and the composition of the fluid phase in terms of H2O, CO2, SO2, and H2S, as a function of pressure, temperature, volatile-free liquid composition, oxygen fugacity, and total amount of volatile components in the system. For the sake of simplicity, we assumed that no reduced or oxidized sulfur-saturated solid or liquid phases nucleate or separate from the liquid-gas system. Minima in sulfur solubility as a function of oxygen fugacity are depicted, in good agreement with theory and experiments. Applications are given for rhyolitic and basaltic melts with various oxygen fugacities in the range NNO±2, and pressure from a few hundred MPa to atmospheric. The developed model accounts for the reciprocal effects of volatiles on their saturation contents, and the complex relationships between the saturation surface of a multicomponent fluid and the liquid composition, volatile abundance, P-T conditions and oxidation state. Belonoshko A, Shi PF & Saxena S, Comp. Geosci, 18, 1267- 1269, (1992). Moretti R, PhD Thesis, University of Pisa Ottonello G, Moretti R, Marini L& Vetuschi Zuccolini M, Chem. Geol, 174, 157-179, (2001). Papale P, Amer. Mineral, 84, 477-492, (1999)

    A model for multicomponent fluid saturation in C-O-H-S-silicate melt systems

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    The dissolution behavior of volatile components in magmas is essential to model the volcanic process from the deep regions of magma generation and storage to the shallow regions of magma eruption and emplacement. Water, carbon dioxide, and sulfur compounds are the main volatile components in natural magmas, constituting in most cases more than 99% of the volcanic gases released before, during, and after eruption.We have developed a method to calculate the chemical equilibrium between a fluid phase in the C-O-H-S system and a silicate melt with composition defined by ten major oxides. The method is based on a previous model for the saturation of H2O-CO2 fluids [1] and on a sulfur solubility model [2] in silicate liquids. For the computation of the fugacities of components in fluids with complex composition we used the SUPERFLUID code [3]. The model allows determining the partition of H2O, CO2, and S between the silicate liquid and the coexisting fluid, and the composition of the fluid phase in terms of H2O, CO2, SO2, and H2S, as a function of pressure, temperature, volatile-free liquid composition, oxygen fugacity, and total amount of each volatile component in the system. App lications are presented to several silicate liquids with rhyolitic and basaltic composition, oxygen fugacities in the range NNO ± 2, and pressure from a few hundred MPa to atmospheric, with the simplifying assumption that no reduced or oxidized sulfur-saturated solid or liquid phases nucleate or separate from the liquid-gas system. Results show the well-known minima in sulfur saturation contents as a function of oxygen fugacity, the reciprocal effects of volatiles on their saturation contents, and the complex relationships between saturation surface of a multicomponent fluid, liquid composition, volatile abundance, P-T conditions, and oxidation state. The method represents therefore a new powerful tool for the prediction of multicomponent gas-melt equilibria in magmas. REFERENCES [1] Papale P. (1999) Am. Mineral., 84, 477-492 [2] Moretti R. and Ottonello G. This issue [3] Belonoshko A.B., Shi P. and Saxena S,K, (1992) Comp. Geosci., 18, 1267-1269.

    On the Lux-Flood basicity of melts in solving their chemical reactivity

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    Reactivity of silicate melts is due to charged functional groups (cations, free anions and polymeric units or structons), which govern mutual interactions between constituting oxides. The main problem arises when defining thermodynamic oxide ion activities. This difficulty is overcome if we adopt the Fincham and Richardson (1954) formalism coupled with a Toop and Samis (1962a,b) polymeric description of the anion matrix, based on the principle of equal reactivity of co-condensing groups and involving singly bonded, doubly bonded and free oxygen, that is oxygen species in three different polarization states. In a chemically complex melt the capability of transferring fractional electronic charges from the ligand to the central cation depends in a complex fashion on the melt structure, affecting the polarization state itself. Therefore, the mean polarization state of the various ligands (mainly oxide ions in silicate melts) and their ability to transfer fractional electronic charges to the central cation are conveniently represented by the optical basicity of the medium. On this basis, Ottonello et al. (2001) related linearly the optical basicity to the extent of the anionic matrix and hence to the polymerization constant. Although the adopted functional form is rather brutal, not accounting for temperature effects, it allows an accurate description of the anionic matrix which enable us to study the iron oxidation state in both anhydrous and hydrous melts, then solving some controversies present in literature, to define a consistent model for water speciation which accounts for the amphoteric behavior of this component and to assess sulfur speciation and solubility. The latter, in particular, was possible only through the adoption of the Flood and Grjotheim (1952) thermochemical cycle, which accounts for the standard state transposition between the Temkin standard state of completely dissociated components and that of pure component at T and P of interest. Recently, we applied the Hybrid Polymeric model (Ottonello, 2001) to assess silicate melt energetics, distinguishing chemical interaction terms from strain energy contributions (Ottonello and Moretti, 2004). Lux-Flood basic oxides give rise to purely endothermic effects when admixed to silica along simple bianry joins, whereas acidic Lux-Flood oxides originate thermal admixtures and amphoteric oxides promote both enthalpic and entropic (non configurational) chemical interactions. This makes the Lux-Flood acid-base character of the various oxides consistent with experimental determinations of nephelauxetic properties of the limiting oxide components in the mean donor ligand field, represented in terms of optical basicity. A linear proportionality is observed between endothermic heat of mixing and optical basicity which allows us to predict the polymerization extent in molten MO-SiO2 binaries. The extension of this proportionality to complex systems requires the application of the Flood-Grjotheim (1952) approach and allows us to shift the previously developed models for iron, water and sulfur to a more rigorous treatment of the anionic matrix of silicate melts. REFERENCES Fincham and Richardson (1954) Proc. Roy. Soc. London, 223A, 40. Flood and Grjotheim (1952), J. Iron Steel Inst., 171, 64. Toop and Samis (1962a) Can. Met. Quart., 1, 129. Toop and Samis (1962b) Trans. Met. Soc. AIME, 224, 878. Moretti (2003) Ann. Geophys. (submitted). Moretti and Ottonello (2003a) Metall. Mat. Trans. B, 34B, 399. Moretti and Ottonello (2003b) J. Non Cryst. Sol., 323, 111. Ottonello (2001), J. Non Cryst. Sol., 282, 72. Ottonello and Moretti (2004) J. Phys. Chem. Sol. (submitted). Ottonello et al. (2001), Chem. Geol., 174, 157
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